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25 St. Thomas L. Rev. 1 (2012-2013)
What Must We Hide: The Ethics of Privacy and the Ethos of Disclosure

handle is hein.journals/stlr25 and id is 9 raw text is: LECTURE
ST. THOMAS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
FALL 2012 DISTINGUISHED SPEAKER SERIES
WHAT MUST WE HIDE: THE ETHICS OF
PRIVACY AND THE ETHOS OF DISCLOSURE
ANITA L. ALLEN
I. INTRODUCTION
We live in an era of personal revelation. We are preoccupied by
seeking, gathering, and disclosing information about others and ourselves.
In the age of revelation, individuals and enterprises are fond of ferreting out
what is buried away. We are fond of broadcasting what we know, think,
do, and feel; and we are motivated by business and pleasure because we
care about friendship, kinship, health, wealth, education, politics, justice,
and culture. A lot of this has to do with technology, of course. We live at a
historical moment characterized by the wide availability of multiple modes
of communication and stored data, easily and frequently accessed. Our
communications are capable of disclosing breadths and depths of personal,
personally identifiable, and sensitive information to many people rapidly.
In this era of revelation-dominated by portable electronics, internet social
media, reality television, and traditional talk radio-many of us are losing
our sense of privacy, our taste for privacy, and our willingness to respect
privacy. Is this set of losses a bad thing? If it is a bad thing, what can be
done about it?
My reflections on these questions begin with a series of diverse
examples from the past several years. The examples illustrate the emergent
ethos of our revelatory era. The first and second examples portray
voluntary self-revelation for amusement and monetary gain; a third and
fourth example depict revelations concerning others, motivated by a desire
for amusement in one case and geopolitical justice in another.
Former Congressman Anthony Weiner was a Democratic member of
the United States House of Representatives elected by the people of New
Anita L. Allen, J.D., Ph.D., is the Henry R. Silverman Professor of Law and Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. This lecture reflects her recent work, including her
book Unpopular Privacy, What Must We Hide.

I

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